[0001] The present invention relates to the production of compositions comprising archaeal
lipids and compositions comprising archaeal lipids.
[0002] Liposomes are spherical lipid bilayer vesicles (lipid esters) surrounding an aqueous
space. They are important carriers for the administration of drugs, vaccines, genes,
proteins, small molecules, antibiotics and nutrients. Liposomes are made of phospholipids,
mainly phosphatidylcholine, and cholesterol, but might also include other lipids,
like phosphatidylethanolamine. Liposomes are generated by a large number of different
methods (reviewed e.g. by
van Hoogevest, Eur. J. Pharm. Sci. 108 (2017), 1-12;
Szoka et al., Ann. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 9 (1980), 467-508), for example by dispersing phospholipids in aqueous medium, e.g. using mechanical
treatment (e.g. in a homogenizer, preferably by high pressure homogenization) or sonication.
They vary between 0.02 to 10 µm in diameter. Their size and composition significantly
affect their properties.
[0003] Archaeosomes (i.e. lipid vesicles which are composed partly or completely of archaeal
lipids) represent a special class of liposomes originating from membrane lipids isolated
from Archaea. Archaeosomes are made of lipid ethers, namely diether structures (archaeols)
or tetraether structures (caldarchaeols) (e.g.
Kaur et al., Drug delivery 23 (2016), 2497;
Patel et al., Critical Reviews in Biotechnology 19 (1999), 317; Fig.4). Diether structures are composed of a glycerol moiety carrying two phytanyl
chains (20-40 carbons in length) on the sn-2,3 positions. Tetraether structures carry
two di-phytanyl chains linked to two glycerol residues in either an antiparallel manner
(caldarchaeol) or a parallel manner (isocaldarchaeol). Furthermore, one or several
cyclopentane rings may occur. In general, archaeosomes are made of a large range of
heterogeneous lipid structures, which significantly affects their characteristics.
Depending on the composition (amount of archaeols vs. caldarchaeols), the lipid layer
is a mono- or a bi-layer or a mixture thereof. The total lipids of Archaea, obtained
by solvent extraction, account for about 5% of the cell dry weight. As shown in several
studies, the type and structure of archaeal lipids depend on the organism they are
extracted from and their respective living environments (e.g. temperature) as well
as growth phases (
Jensen et al., Life 5 (2015), 1539). For example, an increase in growth temperature for
M.
jannaschii from 50 to 65°C resulted in the percent core lipid distribution of archaeol, caldarchaeol
and macrocyclic archaeol to shift from 60, 21, and 19% to 15, 42, and 43%, respectively
(
Sprott et al., J. Bact. 173 (1991), 3907). Also for the Archaea
Sulfolobus it is speculated that the membrane fluidity is controlled by the number of cyclopentane
rings within the phytanyl chains of the caldarchaeol lipids, which increases in response
to higher growth temperatures (Jensen et al., 2015).
[0004] Currently, archaeosomes are receiving increased attention as they have proven to
be highly stable against heat, pH, bile salts, lipases and oxidation, making them
more attractive than conventional liposomes. In several
in vitro studies, it was demonstrated that archaeosomes can be used as versatile nano-carrier
systems for different cargo with a huge prospect to fight various diseases. However,
archaeosomes have not seen their breakthrough in application yet due to the following
limitations:
- 1) They are produced in a complex environment (complex cultivation media and uncontrolled
shake flask cultivations) and are thus very heterogeneous,
- 2) they cannot be produced under defined conditions contradicting regulatory guidelines
(Quality by Design),
- 3) the lipid composition of the Archaea cannot be controlled,
- 4) they cannot be produced cost-efficiently in high amounts.
[0005] It is therefore an object of the present invention to reduce the heterogeneity of
archaeosomes and enable generation of tailor-made archaeal lipids by process parameters
under controlled cultivation conditions for Archaea. More specifically, the object
of the present invention is to provide an archaeosome composition which comprises
many cyclopentane ring lipids but at the same time also phosphatidyl archaeol. It
is a further object to provide compositions of archaeal lipids which are suitable
for specific delivery route and/or administration, e.g. for oral retard delivery and/or
for oral acute delivery. It is a further object to provide archaeal liposome compositions
which have an appropriate stability (defined e.g. as the ability to stably wrap the
drug of interest and enable stomach passage or skin passage or passage of mucosa)
of the archaeosomes and/or sufficient functionality (defined e.g. as ratio between
caldarchaeols and archaeols). Another aim of the present invention is the preparation
of a lipid mixture with the highest possible number of rings in the phytanyl chains
of the caldarchaeol species while maintaining the adjustability of the ratio caldarchaeol:
Archaeol in the liposomes derived from Archaea (within the physiological limits).
[0006] Accordingly, the present invention provides cultivation methods for
Sulfolobus on a defined medium und controlled process conditions for a certain, more homogeneous
lipid composition to generate tailor-made archaeosomes with reduced heterogeneity
as vesicles for the biopharmaceutical industry.
[0007] More specifically, the present invention provides a method for producing a composition
comprising archaeal lipids from a
Sulfolobus cell culture, comprising
- (1) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.025 to 0.035
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral retard therapy, or
- (2) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.005 to 0.015
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral acute therapy.
[0008] Archaeosomes have advantageous properties which have made them as promising candidates
for future pharmaceutical in the prior art. However, up to now, the major obstacles
from making them practically relevant candidates were mainly the lack of controllability
of the production processes and their high variability concerning their lipid ether
composition. The present invention now enables such industrial approach making archaeosomes
realistic candidates for drug cargo intended to be delivered to human patients:
For human therapeutic applications it is generally required that formulated drugs
have a minimum shelf-life of 1-2 years. This implies physical stability (aggregation,
loss of cargo) and chemical stability during storage (oxidation, hydrolysis). In recent
years, the use of liposomes in drug/vaccine delivery has been extended to oral delivery
system. Conventional liposomes cannot be used for this purpose due to their poor stability
in the harsh environment of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract (pH as low as 1 in the
stomach and attack by lipases and bile salts.) The main advantage of archaeosomes
compared to conventional liposomes is their high stability. Different stability aspects
have been tested, demonstrating the benefits of archaeosomes over liposomes:
- Storage stability: Archaeosomes contain saturated phytanyl chains and are thus not
oxidized by air. Consequently, they can be stored in chloroform/methanol at room temperature
without any alteration for years.
- Thermal stability: Comparative thermal stability of archaeosomes made from e.g. Sulfolobus acidocaldarius with conventional liposomes showed that unlike the conventional liposomes that became
permeable at 35-40°C and lost their cargo, archaeosomes did not get leaky at much
higher temperatures. Cyclic structures in the archaeal lipids, which are deposited
as a thermo-adaptive response, confer tight membrane packing and reduced membrane
fluidity. This high thermal stability allows sterilization, which is a crucial requirement
for in vivo applications of lipid vesicles, by autoclaving. In contrast, heat sterilization of
conventional liposomes causes aggregation, hydrolysis and leakage, making the preparation
of sterile liposomes a cumbersome endeavor.
- pH stability: In vitro assays revealed that archaeosomes are more stable at acidic pH than conventional
liposomes: after storage at pH 3.0 for 21 days, liposomes lost up to 60% of their
cargo, whereas archaeosomes only lost 30%.
- Stability against lipases: Lipases in the GI tract cause severe hydrolysis of liposomes,
resulting in a rapid release of the encapsulated cargo. Previous studies showed that
conventional liposomes lost up to 100% of cargo when exposed to phospholipase A2 for
4 hours, whereas archaeosomes lost less than 20%.
- Stability in the presence of bile salts: It was shown that archaeosomes retain all
their cargo during a 90 min incubation at 37°C in simulated human bile, which is longer
than the average residence time of lipid vesicles in the stomach.
- Stability against the combined effect of lipases and bile salts: In the GI tract,
the lipid vesicles meet both lipases and bile salts affecting their stability. Conventional
liposomes lose 100% of their cargo when incubated in the presence of pancreatic lipase
in simulated human bile already after 30 min, whereas lipases and bile salts do not
exhibit a synergistic effect on archaeosomes.
[0009] Summarizing, archaeosomes already had the potential to out-compete currently used
liposomes regarding their stability (more stable over time and more resistant against
heat, pH, lipases, bile acid, autoclavable). With the present invention, a reliable
method is provided to enable suitable and reproducible compositions for specific delivery
of drugs via archaeosomes. The present invention therefore enables production of archaeosomes
in sufficient quantities at sufficient quality.
[0010] Archaeosomes have been recognized as tremendously useful carriers for the delivery
of a variety of cargo. The drug-carrier application, which currently is most promising,
is the use of archaeosomes as microcapsules for oral delivery of therapeutic proteins
or peptides (like insulin). To date, they are also regarded as highly interesting
adjuvants in vaccines since the uptake of archaeosomes in phagocytic cells is more
than 50-fold greater than of conventional liposomes. Studies in mice show that systemic
administration of several test antigens entrapped in archaeosomes gave humoral immune
responses that were comparable to those obtained with the potent, but toxic Freund's
adjuvant. All
in vitro and
in vivo studies performed to date indicate that archaeosomes are safe and do not invoke any
noticeable toxicity. In general, requirements for lipid carriers in medical applications
are:
- Safety, stability, bioavailability, cost effectiveness
- No toxicological effects on the human body
- Induction of nonpathological inflammatory responses
- Promotion of cross-talk between innate and acquired immune system
- Augmentation of humoral antibody response and induction of T-cell mediated response
[0011] Archaeosomes fulfill all of these requirements and thus have been successfully tested
as drug delivery systems for cancer vaccines, immunoadjuvants against Chagas disease,
novel gene delivery systems, carriers for oral delivery of proteins and peptides,
novel antigen delivery systems and others.
[0012] A broad range of potential applications of archaeosomes with medical relevance have
been shown
in vitro and in the animal model. However, due to insufficient homogeneity of the lipid composition
clinical applications have not been realized yet.
[0013] Archaeosomes have been successfully prepared from different archaeal species. Usually,
total archaeal lipids are extracted from frozen biomass by organic solvent extraction
using chloroform/methanol/water. Then, the polar and the neutral lipids are separated
by precipitation using acetone. The resulting lipid extracts can either be used directly
for the preparation of archaeosomes as complex mixtures of different lipid classes
or can be further purified by chromatography to isolate pure polar lipids of a particular
class. Starting from these special, natural archaeal lipids, it is possible to prepare
formulations of archaeosomes and encapsulate or associate hydrophilic or hydrophobic
compounds using available methods developed for the preparation of conventional liposomes,
like the mechanical dispersion method, the lipid hydration method, membrane extrusion
or sonication. Methods for preparing lipids from Archaea or for cultivating Archaea
are disclosed e.g. in
US 2017/0152533 A1,
US 6,316,260 B1,
EP 1 999 137 B1,
EP 0 883 624 B1,
EP 2 109 459 B1,
Siliakus et al. (Extremophiles 21 (2017), 651-670),
Jain et al. (Frontiers in Microbiol. 5 (2014), article 641)).
[0014] Even though Archaea are known to be a useful source of these special lipids, they
have not extensively been used for that purpose yet since currently the composition
of the liposome cannot be controlled and is very heterogenous. Most Archaea are cultivated
on complex medium in shake flasks under uncontrolled conditions which leads to batch-to-batch
variations in terms of lipid class composition, lipid core structure as well as branching.
Furthermore, the composition and the properties of the lip-idome was up to now not
controllable. However, this is essential for reproducible high-quality archaeosome
formation with reduced heterogeneity and specific properties as demanded for pharmaceutical
applications. It was observed that the lipid composition of
S. islandicus and
S. tokodaii was not constant in different processes, especially when the temperature was changed
or samples were taken in different growth phases (
Jensen et al., Life 5 (2015), 1539). By cultivating Archaea on a defined medium in the controlled environment of a bioreactor
the present invention provides an efficient control of the quality (heterogeneity
and composition) of the lipid ethers of the Archaea by changing critical process parameters
(e.g. temperature, growth rate, etc.), which impedes the preparation of well-defined
archaeosomes.
[0015] Archaeosomes can be used for similar tasks as liposomes (administration of drugs
to patients), but show much better properties than liposomes (more stable over time
and more resistant against heat, pH, bile acid, autoclavable) and are expected to
be a viable alternative to conventional liposomes as they can be produced in sufficient
quantities at sufficient quality.
[0016] The global liposome drug delivery market is valued at 2.4 billion USD in 2017 and
expected to reach 5.2 billion USD by the end of 2025, growing at an annual growth
rate of 10.1% during 2018-2025.
[0017] A recent review on the clinical use of liposomal formulations listed a total of 15
approved clinical products worldwide covering the areas anti-cancer, anti-fungal,
vaccines, antiinflammatory drugs and therapeutic genes.
[0018] For the use of archaeosomes as a carrier of pharmaceutical active ingredients, it
is necessary to ensure a different release kinetics depending on the desired site
of action and pharmacodynamics. This release kinetics can be influenced essentially
by the stability of the archaeosomes.
[0019] For stability, in addition to the basic type of lipids, especially the ratio of short
and long-chain lipids is crucial; as well as the possible presence of ring structures
in the lipid chains which, by restricting chain mobility, cause more dense packing
and reduction in membrane permeability. The combination of archaeol (Arc, a total
of 40 C atoms in the phytanyl chains) and caldarchaeol (Cal, a total of 80 C atoms
in the phytanyl chains) here represents a suitable lever. Both substances are natural
membrane constituents of
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius and other archaeal species. There are caldarchaeol variants with various modifications
of the terminal glycerol residues (no modification, phosphatidylinositol (PI), dihexose
(2Hex), and combinations thereof: Cal, PI-Cal, 2Hex-Cal, PI-Cal-2Hex). Furthermore,
Cal variants with a different number of rings occur in the phytanyl chains (in the
case of S. acidocaldarius, preferably 4, 5 or 6 rings). Archaeol occurs mainly as
PI-Arc.
[0020] For a number of reasons, a mixture of 2Hex-Cal and PI-Arc is a particularly interesting
combination for the preparation of archaeosomes according to the present invention,
especially for oral application:
- Caldarchaeols with different number of rings can be used.
- The mixture of short and long-chain lipids ensures influence on the stability of the
formed archaeosomes.
- Both lipids have a sufficient number of functional groups in the head groups for efficient
modification with linkers for use in targeted drug delivery (e.g. attachment of antibody
fragments, aptamers, etc.).
- This modification can be carried out selectively on one of the two lipid classes,
since the head groups differ in structure and chemical properties
[0021] As experimentally shown with the present invention, it is possible to influence the
ratio Cal to Arc via the process parameters temperature and growth rate (maximum ratio
Cal: Arc at optimal growth temperature and at highest growth rate and vice versa).
The proportion of higher number of rings (6 rings vs. 5 or 4 rings), however, surprisingly
depends exclusively on the temperature and does not correlate with the growth rate.
The influence of temperature on the number of rings was observed in
Sulfolobus spp. However, no literature is known about the influence of the growth rate.
[0022] Basically, the highest possible number of rings is necessary for the lowest possible
membrane permeability and thus gastric resistance, which, as the present invention
has shown, therefore requires a cultivation at the highest possible temperature. The
associated loss of temperature as being a suitable means for establishing the Cal:
Arc ratio, however, can be controlled according to the present invention via the growth
rate. For the release of the drug in the intestine, the archaeosomes may not be too
stable, because the drug otherwise cannot be delivered. Thus, the modifiability of
the release kinetics of archaeosomal formulations according to the present invention
is maintained and drugs produced on archaeosomes from the tailored lipid mixtures
provided by the present invention, for example, after oral administration, have a
different duration of action in the intestine.
[0023] With the present invention, the preparation of a lipid mixture with the highest possible
number of rings in the phytanyl chains of the caldarchaeol species is possible while
maintaining the adjustability of the ratio Cal: Arc (within the physiological limits).
Due to their particular chemical suitability, 2Hex-Cal and PI-Arc are specifically
preferred target species according to the present invention. With the present invention
it is therefore possible to provide compositions with archaeosomes with a high number
of rings due to increased growth temperature with simultaneous adjustment of the Cal:
Arc ratio over the growth rate. Through controlled process conditions, the present
invention makes it possible to obtain a lipid extract which can be either used directly
or with minimum purification effort for the production of archaeosomes with high gastric
juice resistance and tailor-made release kinetics for different pharmaceutical active
ingredients.
[0024] With the present invention, two specific compositions comprising archaeal lipids
from a
Sulfolobus cell culture are provided, one being specifically suited for use for oral retard
therapy, the other being specifically suited for use for oral acute therapy.
[0025] The lipids produced for the production of oral archaeosomes with sustained-release
effect are specifically suited for the needs of oral administration and therefore
exhibit a high gastric juice resistance. This resistance is safeguarded by the presence
of a high number of cyclopentane rings. According to the present invention, it was
found that this can be achieved by applying high process temperatures, especially
in the range of 75 to 85°C. For the retard effect necessary for sustained-release,
a slow release of the active substance over a longer period is needed, which therefore
requires temporal stability. According to the present invention, this can be achieved
by the presence of less destabilizing PI-Arc. For obtaining this specific composition
of lipids, the present invention provides the teaching that this requires a high growth
rate, i.e. preferably a growth rate of 0.025 to 0.035 per hour, especially of 0.027
to 0.033 per hour. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the present
method provides a composition for use for oral retard therapy which comprises a ratio
of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of
1:5 to 1:7, especially of 1:5.5 to 1:6.5.
[0026] The lipids produced for the production of oral archaeosomes for acute therapy are,
on the one hand, also specifically suited for the needs of oral administration and
therefore exhibit a high gastric juice resistance. This resistance is - as in the
retard case - safeguarded by the presence of a high number of cyclopentane rings.
According to the present invention, it was found that this can be achieved by applying
high process temperatures, especially in the range of 75 to 85°C. On the other hand,
a composition for acute therapy requires a rapid release of the drug in the intestine.
Therefore, a lower stability of the composition is necessary. According to the present
invention, this can be achieved by the presence of more destabilizing PI-Arc. For
obtaining this specific composition of lipids, the present invention provides the
teaching that this requires a low growth rate, i.e. preferably a growth rate of 0.005
to 0.015 per hour, especially of 0.007 to 0.013 per hour. In a preferred embodiment
of the present invention, the present method provides a composition for use for oral
acute therapy which comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl
inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of 1:2 to 1:4, especially of 1:2.5 to 1:3.5.
[0027] With these compositions obtainable by the present method, tailor-made archaeosomes
can be provided wherein drugs to be delivered can be wrapped for administration, preferably
for oral administration to human patients in need of an effective amount of this drug.
[0028] Culturing
Sulfolobus cell cultures is well available to a person skilled in the art and is an established
technique for a considerable time (as early as
Brock et al., Arch. Mikrobiol. 84 (1972), 54-68). A preferred
Sulfolobus strain is
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius cells; this is one of the established strains in the present field of technology.
[0029] After culturing the
Sulfolobus cell cultures according to the defined culturing conditions, the
Sulfolobus cell lipids are extracted. This can be done in the way as disclosed in the art. Preferably,
the cells are homogenised after culturing, preferably via homogenization, especially
high-pressure homogenization, or sonication, so that the lipids are extractable from
the aqueous culture. A preferred method for purifying the lipids according to the
present invention is the supercritical fluid extraction, especially the extraction
with supercritical CO
2 (see e.g.
Hanif et al., Int. J. Mol. Sci. 13 (2012), 3022-3037).
[0030] Before extraction, it is preferred to mix the homogenised cells with a buffer, e.g.
a buffer known and described in the art to be suitable for
Sulfolobus cell lipids extraction, for example with ammonium acetate buffer, especially with
an ammonium acetate buffer having 100 to 200 mM ammonium acetate.
[0031] According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the archaeal lipids
are obtained by extraction of the aqueous phase comprising the cells and/or the homogenised
cells into an organic phase, preferably by extraction into a chloroform/methanol organic
phase, and phase separation of the organic phase from the aqueous phase. The organic
phase then contains the lipids in the desired, "tailor-made" ratio. The archaeal lipids
can then be obtained by evaporation of the organic phase, preferably by evaporation
of the organic phase to dryness.
[0032] Preferably, the archaeal lipids obtained are combined with a pharmaceutically active
drug, preferably in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, so as
to obtain a composition comprising archaeal lipids and the pharmaceutically active
drug. This is preferably done after the purified composition comprising archaeal lipids
(archaeosomes) are provided; it is, however, also possible to add the drug and/or
further components already in the process of purification and co-purify it/them with
the lipids.
[0033] According to another preferred embodiment of the present method, the archaeal lipids
are obtained by supercritical fluid extraction, especially extraction with supercritical
CO
2.
[0034] According to another aspect, the present invention also relates to a composition
comprising archaeal lipids obtainable by a method according to the present invention.
These "tailor-made" archaeosomal compositions are novel and of high utility for packaging
drugs to be delivered to patients, especially for delivering drugs which are already
known to be suitable for human therapeutic and prophylactic use.
[0035] The present invention also provides two specifically designed composition, one for
the oral retard use and one for oral active use: Accordingly, preferred compositions
according to the present invention comprise either a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol
(2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of 1:5 to 1:7 (retard oral use)
or a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc)
of 1:2 to 1:4 (acute oral use). Both compositions have a high resistance against gastric
juice which allows them an efficient passage of the stomach after oral administration.
The retard oral composition further comprises less destabilising PI-Arc and has therefore
a retarded release property in the intestine allowing a timely delayed release. The
acute oral composition are less stable in the intestine and the packaged drug can
therefore immediately released from the liposomes, enabling a quick delivery for intestinal
uptake of the drug.
[0036] The compositions according to the present invention are suitable to package any drug
which is suitable for liposomal packaging. Accordingly, the compositions according
to the present invention are specifically suited for further comprising a drug, preferably
a drug for human medical use, especially a drug which is subject to an authorization
to place the product on the market as a medicinal product issued in the EU or in the
US. However, since there are virtually no physicochemical boundaries with respect
to the drug to be combined in an archaeosomal preparation, any drug can be packaged
in the lipid compositions according to the present invention. Accordingly, it is preferred
to include drugs in the lipid compositions according to the present invention which
are specified for human (or animal) use, be it because they are subject to a national
or regional market authorization or be it because they are administered to humans
based on another reason.
[0037] Preferred compositions according to the present invention comprise at least 5 % w/w,
preferably at least 10 % w/w, PI-Arc and at least 50 % w/w 2Hex-Cal (% w/w as % w/w
of total lipid).
[0038] The present invention is further illustrated by the following examples and the figures,
yet without being limited thereto.
Fig. 1 shows the composition of the lipid pattern depending on growth temperature;
Fig. 2 shows the composition of the lipid pattern depending on growth rate;
Fig. 3 shows the composition of the lipid pattern depending on process mode;
Fig. 4 shows the structures main lipids of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius;
Fig. 5 shows the influence of growth temperature on the number of cyclopentane rings;
Fig. 6 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown at 68°C;
Fig. 7 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown at 75°C;
Fig. 8 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown at 82°C;
Fig. 9 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown with a growth rate of 0.010
h-1;
Fig. 10 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown with a growth rate of 0.020
h-1;
Fig. 11 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown with a growth rate of 0.034
h-1;
Fig. 12 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown in fed-batch mode;
Fig. 13 shows the spectral data of biomass sample grown in continuous mode.
Examples:
1. Generation of tailor-made archaeal lipids
[0039] The present invention describes a technology for the production of distinct lipid
patterns in
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius with a defined and tunable composition via variation of process parameters during
the upstream process.
[0040] The present examples show that via variation of critical process parameters during
the upstream, e.g. temperature, growth rate, process mode, the organism
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius produced different lipid patterns (ratio of distinct lipid fractions). Thus, consequently
different lipid compositions can be harvested after downstream processing. Since the
lipid pattern can be influenced by a broad number of critical process parameters (temperature,
growth rate, process mode, pressure, osmolarity, media composition, dissolved oxygen
content, etc.) very specific tuning of the pattern is possible.
[0041] The following paragraphs describe showcases of the influence of (A) temperature,
(B) growth rate and (C) process mode on the ratio of lipid fractions. Depending on
the application of the lipid mix by the user/customer, a desired lipid pattern can
be adjusted by carefully selecting the required process parameters.
[0042] Cultures were grown in a controlled bioreactor environment on a defined medium.
1.1 Influence of temperature
[0043] Temperature was set to 68/75/82 °C for a period of 3 generation times for each temperature
and afterwards a biomass sample was taken. The relative abundance of the 5 main lipid
fractions was determined via MALDI-MS (positive ion mode; without addition of Na
+). The results are displayed in Figs. 1 and 5 to 8.
1.2 Influence of growth rate
[0044] Growth rate was set to 0.010/0.020/0.034 h-1 for a period of 3 generation times for
each growth rate and afterwards a biomass sample was taken. The relative abundance
of the 5 main lipid fractions was determined via MALDI-MS (positive ion mode; without
addition of Na
+). The results are displayed in Figs. 2, 9, 10 and 11.
1.3 Influence of process mode
[0045] Culture was grown in different process modes (Fed-batch and continuous mode) for
a period of 3 generation times for each process mode and afterwards a biomass sample
was taken. The relative abundance of the 5 main lipid fractions was determined via
MALDI-MS (positive ion mode; without addition of Na
+). The results are displayed in Figs. 3, 12 and 13.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1 Upstream: Bioreactor cultivation of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius DSM639
[0046] For the generation of tailor-made archaeal lipids
S. acidocaldarius was cultivated in a continuous process mode to ensure constant process conditions
over at least 3 generation times. The continuous phase was preceded by a batch and
fed-batch phase for buildup of biomass. The volumes in the following paragraphs are
exemplarily and can be scaled up or down if required.
[0047] The preculture of
Sulfolobus acidocaldarius DSM 639 was grown in a 100 mL shake flask for 100 h in a rotary oil bath at 75 °C
and 100 rpm in a defined medium according to
Quehenberger et al. (Journal of Biotechnology (2019) Submission JBIOTEC-D-18-01483; "VD Medium"; see the following table).
Table:
Composition of the VD Medium. |
Basal salts and trace elements |
(NH4)2SO4 |
1.04 |
g/L |
7.87 |
mM |
KH2PO4 |
0.14 |
g/L |
1.03 |
mM |
MgSO4·7 H2O |
0.125 |
g/L |
0.51 |
mM |
CaCl2·2 H2O |
0.035 |
g/L |
0.24 |
mM |
Fe(III)Citrate·H2O |
9.75 |
mg/L |
37.08 |
µM |
Na2B4O7·10 H2O |
0.90 |
mg/L |
2.36 |
µM |
MnCl2·4 H2O |
0.36 |
mg/L |
1.82 |
µM |
ZnSO4·7 H2O |
0.066 |
mg/L |
0.23 |
µM |
CuCl2·2 H2O |
0.010 |
mg/L |
0.059 |
µM |
Na2MoO4·2 H2O |
0.006 |
mg/L |
0.025 |
µM |
CoCl2·6 H2O |
0.002 |
mg/L |
0.007 |
µM |
|
|
|
|
|
C-sources |
|
|
|
|
Na-L-glutamate |
1.75 |
g/L |
10.35 |
mM |
D-glucose |
3.00 |
g/L |
16.65 |
mM |
Citric acid |
0.50 |
g/L |
2.60 |
mM |
|
|
|
|
|
Adjust to pH 3 with H2SO4 |
|
∼130 |
mM |
[0048] The preculture was transferred aseptically to a culture vessel containing a defined
medium according to Quehenberger et al. (2019), yielding a total starting volume for
the batch phase of 1.5 L. The Batch phase was performed at 75 °C until a decrease
in the CO
2 signal was observed and followed by a fed-batch phase at 75 °C (medium containing
10 g/L Na-glutamate and 3 g/L D-glucose, exponential feed, µ = 0.03 h
-1) until a total volume of 2.5 L was reached. The fed-batch phase was followed by a
continuous cultivation at the desired growth temperature and growth rate. To ensure
enough time for the organism to adapt to the specific growth conditions during the
continuous phase biomass was harvested after at least 3 generation times.
[0049] The calculation of the initial flow rate (F
0) of the feed for the exponential phase is based on the mass balance of the carbon
source:
- V̇
- volumetric flow rate [L/h]
- ci
- concentration of compound i [g/L]
- VR
- reactor volume [L]
- ri
- reaction rate of component i [g/L/h]
Formula 1: General mass balance
[0050] After simplification:
- V̇
- volumetric flow rate [L/h]
- ci
- concentration of compound i [g/L]
- VR
- reactor volume [L]
- ri
- reaction rate of component i [g/L/h]
Formula 2: Simplified mass balance for fed-batch
[0051] And setting right side (constant terms) to zero and rewriting:
- F0
- initial feed rate of fed batch [g/h]
- µ
- specific growth rate [h-1]
- x0
- initial biomass concentration [g/L]
- V0
- starting volume of reactor [L]
- s0
- substrate concentration of the feed [g/L]
- YX/S
- biomass yield [g/g]
[0052] Formula 3: Initial feed rate during fed-batch phase (density of broth is assumed
as 1 kg/L).
[0053] For calculation of the initial Feedrate (F
0, Formula 3) x
0 was determined via OD600 measurement and a calibration curve for the conversion of
OD600 to dry cell weight; S
0 was calculated as the sum of the concentrations of Na-glutamate and D-glucose and
an empirically determined biomass yield of 0.33 was assumed. F
0 was then increased exponentially during the fed-batch phase according to Formula
4.

[0054] Formula 4: Calculation of the Feedrate during the fed-batch phase.
[0055] Feeding was controlled via the weight of the Feed vessel and a PID-controller was
used to compensate for deviations of the feed pump.
[0056] During the continuous phase the value for the dilution rate (D) was set equal to
the desired growth rate (D=µ), whereby the dilution rate was calculated as the sum
of added acid stream and feed. With a known working volume (V
R) the feed rate (F
conti) was calculated via F
conti=D*V
R (density of broth is assumed as 1 kg/L).
[0057] Dissolved oxygen levels were monitored online and maintained above 15% by aerating
with 0.25 to 0.5 vvm (volumes gas per culture volume per minute) pressurized air.
Air was substituted with pure oxygen if necessary. pH was monitored online and kept
at 3.0 +/- 0.1 by addition of H
2SO
4 (9.6% v/v). Feed medium was supplied via a peristaltic pump module following a feed-forward
controlled exponential feeding strategy. Mixing was performed at 300 to 500 rpm. CO
2 content in the offgas was monitored.
2.1 Downstream: Cell harvest, biomass homogenization and lipid extraction
[0058] Cells were harvested via centrifugation at 14,000g for 15 min. After discarding the
supernatant, the cell pellet was stored at -20 °C for further processing. A cell pellet
from 100 mL culture broth was thawed and resuspended in 10 mL ice cold ammonium acetate
buffer (155 mM). The suspension was homogenized in a glass beaker on an ice/water
bath via sonication (6x1 min with 30 sec pause between pulses). After homogenization
the sample was diluted to an OD600 of 1.5 with ice cold ammonium acetate buffer (155
mM). 3.33 parts of an ice cold 2:1 CHCl
3/MeOH mixture was added to 1 part diluted homogenate and the resulting mixture was
vortexed for 30 minutes at 1,400 rpm and 4 °C. The samples were centrifuged (2 min,
1,000g, 4°C) for phase separation. The organic phase was collected in a glass vial
and the sample was evaporated to dryness with N
2 at room temperature. The lipids were stored at -20 °C for further analysis.
2.3 Analytics: Identification of lipid fractions with MALDI mass spectrometry
[0059] The dried lipid fractions were reconstituted in a 1:3 CHCl
3/MeOH mixture. These fractions were immediately used for MALDI sample preparation
using 2-4-,6-trihydroxy-acetophenon (THAP) as MALDI matrix (roughly 15 mg THAP/mL
without or with the addition of sodium chloride for promotion of sodium adduct ions).
Finally, matrix and analyte solution were mixed 1:1 for the deposition onto 384-well
plate stainless steel MALDI targets: The mass spectrometric instrument used was a
Shimadzu MALDI 7090 TOF/RTOF tandem time-of-flight mass spectrometer fitted with a
grounded gas collision cell for high-energy CID experiments (E
LAB = 20 keV, collision gas: helium). Prior to tandem MS experiments the samples were
measured in positive- and negative-ion reflectron TOF-MS. Mass calibration was performed
with a commercial peptide mixture supplied by Shimadzu allowing mass calibration up
to m/z 3600. In the positive-ion mode, mainly [M+Na]
+ and [M+2Na-H]
+ adduct ions of the analyte molecules were detected depending on salt doping. Most
lipids contained phosphoinositol head groups. All analytes were characterized by high-energy
CID TOF/RTOF-MS. In contrast, in negative-ion mode only phosphoinositol-containing
lipids were detected (but no neutral lipids) as [M-H]
- ions being also characterized by high-energy CID TOF/RTOF-MS. Up to now, all charged
lipid analytes contain a phosphoinositol polar head group. Minor lipids, which may
further be present in this mixture, can be analyzed after HPTLC-separation and micropreparative
extraction by subsequent MALDI analysis.
[0060] Accordingly, the present invention provides for the following preferred embodiments:
- 1. Method for producing a composition comprising archaeal lipids from an archaeal
cell culture, comprising growing an archaeal cell culture at controlled conditions
and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain a composition
comprising archaeal lipids.
- 2. Method according to embodiment 1, wherein the controlled conditions are selected
from pH, growth rate, temperature, and process mode.
- 3. Method according to embodiment 1 or 2, wherein the archaeal cell culture is a culture
of S. acidocaldarius, M. hungatei, M. voltae, M. concilii, M. smithii, M. espanolae,
T. acidophilum, M. mazei, M. espanole, T. acidophilum, H. salinarum, M. smithii, M.
stadtmanae, H. halobium, H. morrhuae, M. jannaschii, S. islandicus, S. solfataricus,
S. shibatae, S. tokodaii, S. Metallicus, M. sedula, H. hispanica, and H.volcanii.
- 4. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 3, comprising growing the archaeal
culture at a temperature of 55 to 90°C, preferably of 70 to 85°C, especially of 75
to 85°C.
- 5. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 4, comprising growing the archaeal
culture at a growth rate of 0.025 to 0.035 per hour, especially of 0.027 to 0.033
per hour, or at a growth rate of 0.005 to 0.015 per hour, especially of 0.007 to 0.013
per hour.
- 6. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 5, comprising growing the archaeal
culture at a pH of 2 to 4, preferably of 2.5 to 3.5.
- 7. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 6, comprising growing the archaeal
culture at continuous mode.
- 8. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 6, comprising growing the archaeal
culture in batch mode, especially in fed-batch mode.
- 9. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 8, wherein the archaeal lipids
are obtained by extraction of the aqueous phase comprising the cells and/or the homogenised
cells into an organic phase, preferably by extraction into a chloroform/methanol organic
phase, and phase separation of the organic phase from the aqueous phase.
- 10. Method according to any one of the embodiments 1 to 9, wherein the cells are homogenised
after culturing, preferably via homogenization, especially high-pressure homogenization,
or sonication.
- 11. Method for producing a composition comprising archaeal lipids from a Sulfolobus cell culture, comprising
- (1) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.025 to 0.035
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral retard therapy, or
- (2) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.005 to 0.015
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral acute therapy.
- 12. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 11, wherein the Sulfolobus cell culture is a culture of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius cells.
- 13. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 12, wherein the composition for
use for oral retard therapy comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal)
to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of 1:5 to 1:7, especially of 1:5.5 to 1:6.5.
- 14. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 or 12, wherein the composition for
use for oral acute therapy comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to
phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of 1:2 to 1:4, especially of 1:2.5 to 1:3.5.
- 15. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 14, wherein the cells are homogenised
after culturing, preferably via homogenization, especially high-pressure homogenization,
or sonication.
- 16. Method according to embodiment 15, wherein the homogenised cells are mixed with
a buffer, preferably with ammonium acetate buffer, especially with an ammonium acetate
buffer having 100 to 200 mM ammonium acetate.
- 17. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 16, wherein the archaeal lipids
are obtained by extraction of the aqueous phase comprising the cells and/or the homogenised
cells into an organic phase, preferably by extraction into a chloroform/methanol organic
phase, and phase separation of the organic phase from the aqueous phase.
- 18. Method according to embodiment 17, wherein the archaeal lipids are obtained by
evaporation of the organic phase, preferably by evaporation of the organic phase to
dryness.
- 19. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 18, wherein the archaeal lipids
obtained are combined with a pharmaceutically active drug, preferably in combination
with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, so as to obtain a composition comprising
archaeal lipids and the pharmaceutically active drug.
- 20. Method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 19, wherein the archaeal lipids
are obtained by supercritical fluid extraction, especially extraction with supercritical
CO2.
- 21. Composition comprising archaeal lipids obtainable by a method according to any
one of embodiments 1 to 20.
- 22. Composition according to embodiment 21, wherein the composition comprises a ratio
of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of
1:5 to 1:7 or of 1:2 to 1:4.
- 23. Composition according to embodiment 21 or 22, further comprising a drug, preferably
a drug for human medical use, especially a drug which is subject to an authorization
to place the product on the market as a medicinal product issued in the EU or in the
US.
- 24. Composition according to any one of embodiment 21 to 23, wherein the archaeosomes
comprise at least 5 % w/w, preferably at least 10 % w/w, PI-Arc and at least 50 %
w/w 2Hex-Cal (% w/w as % w/w of total lipid).
- 25. Composition according to any one of embodiment 21 to 24, wherein the archaeosomes
comprise as a drug to be administered to a patient, an antigen, an oral drug, a vaccine,
an antioxidant, a virus-like particle, a nucleic acid, especially a DNA, an RNA, a
pDNA, an antibiotic, a polypeptide or a protein.
- 26. Composition according to any one of embodiment 21 to 25, wherein the archaeosomes
are for use in oral, mucosal or transdermal administration.
- 27. Composition according to any one of embodiment 21 to 26, wherein in a liposomal
composition which is subject to an authorization to place the product on the market
as a medicinal product issued in the EU or in the US, the liposomes are replaced by
the archaeosomes provided by a method according to any one of embodiments 1 to 20.
1. Method for producing a composition comprising archaeal lipids from a
Sulfolobus cell culture, comprising
(1) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.025 to 0.035
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral retard therapy, or
(2) growing a Sulfolobus cell culture at a temperature of 75 to 85°C and at a growth rate of 0.005 to 0.015
per hour and extracting the archaeal lipids from the archaeal culture so as to obtain
a composition for use for oral acute therapy.
2. Method according to claim 1, wherein the Sulfolobus cell culture is a culture of Sulfolobus acidocaldarius cells.
3. Method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the composition for use for oral retard
therapy comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol
(PI-Arc) of 1:5 to 1:7, especially of 1:5.5 to 1:6.5.
4. Method according to claim 1 or 2, wherein the composition for use for oral acute therapy
comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol (2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol
(PI-Arc) of 1:2 to 1:4, especially of 1:2.5 to 1:3.5.
5. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein the cells are homogenised after
culturing, preferably via homogenization, especially high-pressure homogenization,
or sonication.
6. Method according to claim 5, wherein the homogenised cells are mixed with a buffer,
preferably with ammonium acetate buffer, especially with an ammonium acetate buffer
having 100 to 200 mM ammonium acetate.
7. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 6, wherein the archaeal lipids are obtained
by extraction from the aqueous phase comprising the cells and/or the homogenised cells
into an organic phase, preferably by extraction into a chloroform/methanol organic
phase, and phase separation of the organic phase from the aqueous phase.
8. Method according to claim 7, wherein the archaeal lipids are obtained by evaporation
of the organic phase, preferably by evaporation of the organic phase to dryness.
9. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein the archaeal lipids obtained
are combined with a pharmaceutically active drug, preferably in combination with a
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, so as to obtain a composition comprising archaeal
lipids and the pharmaceutically active drug.
10. Method according to any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein the archaeal lipids are obtained
by supercritical fluid extraction, especially extraction with supercritical CO2.
11. Composition comprising archaeal lipids obtainable by a method according to any one
of claims 1 to 10.
12. Composition according to claim 11, wherein the composition comprises a ratio of dihexose-caldarchaeol
(2Hex-Cal) to phosphatidyl inositol-archaeol (PI-Arc) of 1:5 to 1:7 or of 1:2 to 1:4.
13. Composition according to claim 11 or 12, further comprising a drug, preferably a drug
for human medical use, especially a drug which is subject to an authorization to place
the product on the market as a medicinal product issued in the EU or in the US.
14. Composition according to any one of claims 11 to 13, wherein the archaeosomes comprise
at least 5 % w/w, preferably at least 10 % w/w, PI-Arc and at least 50 % w/w 2Hex-Cal
(% w/w as % w/w of total lipid).